Ranking Barcelona’s 19 Dutch players from Cruyff to Cillessen

Barcelona‘s love affair with the Netherlands goes back nearly 50 years and continues to this day with the signing of Ajax‘s Frenkie de Jong.

The talented young midfielder will be the 20th Dutch player to don the famous Blaugrana colours, and he’s got big shoes to fill. Although, to be fair, the same could be said of everyone else to sign for the club since a certain Ballon d’Or winner arrived from Ajax in 1973, bringing total football with him.

Here are all 19 of Barcelona’s Dutch footballers, ranked from worst to best.

19. Ibrahim Afellay

Joining from PSV in 2010, Afellay ultimately didn’t amount to much at Barcelona. Or Stoke for that matter.

Nevertheless, he was responsible for one of the most important assists in the club’s history. On for the injured Pedro in the Champions League semi-final against Real Madrid, he came up big with the cross for Messi’s first goal in a 2-0 win.

18. Ronald de Boer

Ronald and Frank de Boer joined Louis van Gaal’s Barcelona from Ajax in January 1999, but it’s safe to say one of the twins is remembered more fondly than the other.

Ronald contributed to the 1998-99 title win but scored just twice in 37 appearances, something of a letdown after arriving with a reputation as a goalscoring midfielder. He was allowed to leave for Rangers after just 18 months.

17. Winston Bogarde

Injuries robbed Bogarde of a chance to make much of an impact at Barcelona, with him generally sidelined during his time at the club in the late 90s.

But alongside the De Boer twins, he did manage to play some part when he arrived midway through the 1998-99 season that ended with Barcelona topping the table.

16. Richard Witschge

A peripheral figure in Johan Cruyff’s dream team of the early 90s, Witschge has a pair of back-to-back titles and a European Cup to his name despite not featuring a great deal.

He faced stiff competition due to the strict rules on a maximum of three foreign players at a time when the club also boasted Michael Laudrup, Hristo Stoichkov and Ronald Koeman.

15. Jordi Cruyff

Forever in the shadow of his legendary father, Jordi could never quite live up to those impossible expectations. Still, ignore that and he was a solid enough player who contributed some important goals before leaving for Manchester United.

14. Jasper Cillessen

Goalkeeper for the national team, Cillessen is a capable presence between the sticks, but he’d never be able to usurp the imperious Marc-Andre ter Stegen.

Still, he did what was needed when he was given a chance in the Copa del Rey, lifting back-to-back trophies between in 2017 and 2018, though he was unable to make it three in a row as Valencia (where he’s since moved) recorded a shock win in the 2019 final.

13. Michael Reiziger

The Champions League winner with Ajax became a dependable club servant at Barcelona.

Playing right-back for seven seasons, Reiziger enjoyed some successes, especially early on as he joined back up with Van Gaal, but his time at the club coincided with a relatively fallow period in terms of trophies.

12. Boudewijn Zenden

Zenden arrived at the Camp Nou after his former PSV team-mate Ronaldo, with whom he enjoyed a brilliant on-field relationship, departed.

The pair of them together might have achieved great things at Barcelona, but Zenden didn’t do too badly for himself. Adapting to a wing-back role under Van Gaal, he was a key player in the title win of 1999.

11. Ruud Hesp

Hesp usurped Vitor Baia in goal at Barcelona, and shone brightly for a short spell in the twilight years of his career, winning back-to-back league titles in 1998 and 1999.

10. Edgar Davids

Davids spent just half a season on loan at Barcelona, but he left a massive impression. He joined while the club was faltering, in a miserable state, but has been credited with turning their form around to finish as respectable runners-up behind Valencia. They looked like no-hopers before he arrived.

Exceptionally good under Frank Rijkaard, Davids helped buy his compatriot time and patience in the dugout. Rijkaard then went on to win two league titles, ending a run of five years without one, as well as the Champions League.

But he’d do well to replicate some of his performances. Blessed with blistering pace, Overmars was a shining light in a relatively mediocre Barcelona, while a niggling knee injury denied him the chance of making a more consistent impact.

8. Mark van Bommel

The antithesis to the tidy metronomic passing of Xavi and Andres Iniesta, Van Bommel showed there are other ways to win.

The competitive tough-tackler, one of football’s greatest sh*thouses, was a big part of the Barcelona side that won the La Liga and Champions League double in 2005-06. That was his only season at the club, how’s that for a batting average?

7. Johan Neeskens

Famously described as a “kamikaze pilot”, Neeskens’ aggression and energy in midfield serves as a blueprint for pressing teams today.

He only won one Copa del Rey and one Cup Winners Cup, and arguably never quite hit the heights he managed with Ajax or his national team, but he nevertheless can be credited as one of the players that helped bring total football to the Nou Camp.

6. Giovanni van Bronckhorst

Van Bronckhorst did well at left-back, a new role having played in midfield at Arsenal.

His career might have never recovered after suffering a cruciate knee ligament injury while with the Gunners. But he went on to make over 100 appearances for Barcelona, winning two league titles and the Champions League. What a comeback.

5. Phillip Cocu

Cocu won the title in his first year at the club and was later rewarded with the vice-captaincy by Van Gaal for his leadership qualities. Five years without La Liga followed, but with a better team around him Cocu may well have helped Barcelona win more silverware.

No Dutchman has played more games for Barcelona. His intelligence on the pitch has translated well to the dugout, leading PSV to three consecutive Eredivisie titles as manager.

4. Frank de Boer

A perfect Barcelona centre-half, De Boer had the calmness and bravery required to play out from the back. “Barca DNA” personified.

3. Patrick Kluivert

Still Barcelona’s all-time leading Dutch goalscorer, Kluivert scored a not-too-shabby 122 goals in 257 appearances for the club.

He spent the same six-year period at the club as Cocu and didn’t win a great amount of silverware, but at his best he was a force of nature.

2. Ronald Koeman

Koeman scored the goal that clinched Barcelona’s first European Cup, and was a key player in Cruyff’s sensational team of the early 90s.

That thunderous free-kick against Sampdoria at Wembley was trademark Koeman, who is the only Barcelona player in history that can rival Lionel Messi in terms of free-kicks. One of the great attacking defenders.

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1. Johan Cruyff

The first Dutchman to play for Barcelona is also the man who changed everything. Guardiola, Busquets, Xavi, Iniesta – everything that you’ve come to know about Barcelona’s style of play today is down to the influence of Cruyff.

Arriving at the club after winning the European Cup for three years in a row with Ajax, as well as the Ballon d’Or twice, this was one of the most hyped transfers of all-time.

Thanks to his impact, ending a 14-year wait for the league title, he somehow lived up to those expectations. As a player he brought the mindset and approach that he would later double down on as manager.

“He changed the culture at Ajax and after at Barcelona there was no specific way they played,” Pep Guardiola said of him.

“He arrived and said ‘Guys, we’re going to play that way’ and everyone followed him. Go to the academy and you see the seven, eight, nine-year-olds playing like the first team.

“He created something from nothing. You need knowledge, charisma and personality. To have the charisma for everyone to follow you.”